Huh P W, Belayev L, Zhao W, Koch S, Busto R, Ginsberg M D
Cerebral Vascular Disease Research Center, Department of Neurology, University of Miami School of Medicine, Florida 33101, USA.
J Neurosurg. 2000 Jan;92(1):91-9. doi: 10.3171/jns.2000.92.1.0091.
The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of prolonged hypothermia on ischemic injury in a highly reproducible model of middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion in rats.
Male Sprague-Dawley rats were anesthetized with halothane and subjected to 120 minutes of temporary MCA occlusion by retrograde insertion of an intraluminal nylon suture coated with poly-L-lysine through the external carotid artery into the internal carotid artery and the MCA. Two levels of prolonged postischemic cranial hypothermia (32 degrees C and 27 degrees C) and one level of intraischemic cranial hypothermia (32 degrees C) were compared with the ischemic normothermia (37 degrees C) condition. Target cranial temperatures were maintained for 3 hours and then gradually restored to 35 degrees C over an additional 2-hour period. The animals were evaluated using a quantitative neurobehavioral battery of tests before inducing MCA occlusion, during occlusion (at 60 minutes postonset in all rats except those in the intraischemic hypothermia group), and at 24, 48, and 72 hours after reperfusion. The rat brains were perfusion fixed at 72 hours after ischemia, and infarct volumes and brain edema were determined. Both intraischemic and postischemic cooling to 32 degrees C led to similar significant reductions in cortical infarct volume (by 89% and 88%, respectively) and total infarct volume (by 54% and 69%, respectively), whereas postischemic cooling to 27 degrees C produced lesser reductions (64% and 49%, respectively), which were not statistically significant. All three hypothermic regimens significantly lessened hemispheric swelling and improved the neurological score at 24 hours. The authors' data confirm that a high degree of histological neuroprotection is conferred by postischemic cooling to 32 degrees C, which is virtually equivalent to that observed with intraischemic cooling to the same level.
These results may be relevant to the design of future clinical trials of therapeutic hypothermia for acute ischemic stroke.
本研究旨在比较长时间低温对大鼠大脑中动脉(MCA)闭塞高度可重复模型中缺血性损伤的影响。
雄性Sprague-Dawley大鼠用氟烷麻醉,通过将涂有聚-L-赖氨酸的腔内尼龙缝线经颈外动脉逆行插入颈内动脉和MCA,使其经历120分钟的暂时性MCA闭塞。将两种长时间缺血后颅脑低温水平(32℃和27℃)和一种缺血期间颅脑低温水平(32℃)与缺血正常体温(37℃)状态进行比较。目标颅脑温度维持3小时,然后在另外2小时内逐渐恢复到35℃。在诱导MCA闭塞前、闭塞期间(除缺血期间低温组外的所有大鼠在发病后60分钟)以及再灌注后24、48和72小时,使用一系列定量神经行为测试对动物进行评估。缺血72小时后对大鼠大脑进行灌注固定,测定梗死体积和脑水肿。缺血期间和缺血后冷却至32℃均导致皮质梗死体积(分别减少89%和88%)和总梗死体积(分别减少54%和69%)有相似的显著降低,而缺血后冷却至27℃产生的降低幅度较小(分别为64%和49%),无统计学意义。所有三种低温方案均显著减轻半球肿胀并改善24小时时的神经学评分。作者的数据证实,缺血后冷却至32℃可提供高度的组织学神经保护,这与缺血期间冷却至相同水平所观察到的情况几乎相同。
这些结果可能与未来急性缺血性卒中治疗性低温临床试验的设计相关。